Abstract

BackgroundParental support is an important element in overweight prevention programs for children. The purpose of this study was to examine everyday life situations in which mothers encounter difficulties encouraging healthy energy balance–related behavior in their school-age children.MethodsWe formed four focus groups containing 6–9 participants each. The participants were mothers of Dutch, Turkish, or Moroccan descent with a child 8–13 years of age. All focus group sessions were recorded, transcribed, and coded. Content was analyzed conventionally using ATLAS.ti 6.ResultsTwenty-seven difficult everyday life situations were identified in 14 settings. The five most frequently reported situations were a daily struggle regarding eating vegetables, eating breakfast on time before going to school, eating candy and snacks between meals, and spending excessive time watching television and using the computer. A perceived loss of parental control, the inability to establish rules and the failure to consistently enforce those rules were the most commonly cited reasons for why the mothers experience these situations as being difficult.ConclusionsWe identified five difficult everyday life situations related to healthy energy balance-related behavior. These five difficult situations were used as the input for developing a web-based parenting program designed to prevent children from becoming overweight. We reasoned that if we use these situations and the underlying reasons, many parents would recognize these situations and are willing to learn how to deal with them and complete the e-learning.

Highlights

  • Parental support is an important element in overweight prevention programs for children

  • Each focus group consisted of 6–9 mothers, with a total of 13 Dutch, 1 German, 8 Turkish, and 6 Moroccan mothers

  • Each of the four focus groups contained a mixture of mothers from Dutch, Turkish and Moroccan descent

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Summary

Introduction

Parental support is an important element in overweight prevention programs for children. The purpose of this study was to examine everyday life situations in which mothers encounter difficulties encouraging healthy energy balance–related behavior in their school-age children. A high number of children engage in unhealthy energy balance–related behaviors (EBRBs), including excessive television watching and computer use, and low consumption of fruits and/or vegetables [1,2,3,4]. Published reviews increasingly emphasize the impact of parenting on preventing childhood overweight and obesity [16,17,18,19,20,21]. To date, most Dutch and international obesity prevention programs have paid limited attention to parenting aspects [23,24,25,26,27,28,29]

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